Publications & Productions
Watch this space - more publications and productions will be added as they are released.
The Centre for Media History has members working in the following areas:
History of the media:
CMH members working in this area include: Michelle Arrow, Peter Doyle, Sandey Fitzgerald, Murray Goot, Liz Gould, Bridget Griffen-Foley, Deborah Groarke, Madeleine Hastie, Justine Lloyd, Virginia Madsen, Kathryn Millard, Alec Morgan, David Myton, Don Pergult, John Potts, Tom D. C. Roberts, Margaret Van Heekeren, Can Yalcinkaya and Jan Zwar
CMH members working in this area include: Michelle Arrow, Peter Doyle, Sandey Fitzgerald, Murray Goot, Liz Gould, Bridget Griffen-Foley, Deborah Groarke, Madeleine Hastie, Justine Lloyd, Virginia Madsen, Kathryn Millard, Alec Morgan, David Myton, Don Pergult, John Potts, Tom D. C. Roberts, Margaret Van Heekeren, Can Yalcinkaya and Jan Zwar
History in the media:
CMH members working in this area include: Michelle Arrow, Harvey Broadbent, Maree Delofski, Bruce Dennett, Tanya Evans, Bridget Griffen-Foley, Kyle Harvey, Mandy Kretzschmar, Virginia Madsen, Kathryn Millard, Alec Morgan and Tom Murray.
Publications
A Companion to the Australian Media
- There is currently no one authoritative study of the media and communications in Australia. Centre Director Professor Bridget Griffen-Foley's book, A Companion to the Australian Media, will cover the news media in Australia from the colonial era to the present day.
Changing Stations: The Story of Australian Commercial Radio
- Centre Director Professor Bridget Griffen-Foley's book, Changing Stations: The Story of Australian Commercial Radio, is the first full-scale, national history of commercial radio in Australia, from the experiments and schemes of the 1920s through to the eve of the introduction of digital radio in 2009.
Friday on our Minds: Popular Culture in Australia since 1945
- Dr Michelle Arrow's book, Friday on our Minds: Popular Culture in Australia since 1945, examines popular culture through three main lenses: consumerism and the development of a mass consumer society; the impact of technological change; and the ways that popular culture contributes to, and articulates, individual and collective identities.
